Bombs, kidnapping and financial extortion are among the problems facing Syria's Christians, according to the leader of the country's Catholics.

Speaking to Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need (ACN), Patriarch Gregorios III, the head of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church, said, “Syria is experiencing a lengthy, bloody way of the cross, stretching along all the country’s roads.”

The patriarch, who is president of the Assembly of Catholic Hierarchs in Syria, added, “You may think that it is safe here or unsafe there, but at any moment you may be killed by bomb, missile or bullet, not to mention being kidnapped or taken hostage for ransom, or murdered.”

Christians have been targeted because they are seen as “a weak element” and a source of ransom, according to the head of the Melkite Church.

Recalling events at Maaloula last month, where jihadists tried to force Christians to convert to Islam, the patriarch reported that a number of villagers were still missing and all the residents had fled.

The Melkite leader said, “Six have been kidnapped since September 4th, we don’t know where they are.”

According to the patriarch 450,000 Christians have left Syria or are internally displaced, including all of his father’s family.

Patriarch Gregorios described how in some places Islamist extremists were making life difficult for civilians.

He said, “Yabroud is controlled not only by opposition troops but also by some jihadists; not only by the opposition, the opposition is OK, but jihadists are something else.”

“They have to pay their share as Christians, monthly since the beginning of 2012, $35,000 a month, the share of the Muslim is also maybe more.”

“But now, in spite of paying this monthly amount, on September 27th and now on October 16th, the old church of Yabroud, of Constantine and Helena, was shelled by bombs. It was a church before Christianity, it was a temple of Jupiter and converted, an old beautiful church; they put bombs in the church and they discovered two bombs but they dismantled them.” One was planted in the confessional.

He stressed that many ordinary Muslims had suffered as well as Christians, and described the country’s history of religious harmony between the faiths.

According to the patriarch, most jihadists came from outside Syria to join the fighting.

Also speaking with ACN was Sister Hanan of the Good Shepherd Sisters, who talked about the congregation’s work with refugees in Lebanon.

Sister Hanan described help being given to “women and children who have been wounded by life’s circumstance” at the medical center they run in Beirut.

She thanked ACN’s benefactors for their “generous and open hearts,” echoing the patriarch’s gratitude, “I would also like to thank very, very much this wonderful charity, Aid to the Church in Need.”